Senrian Occupation of Jindao

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Senrian Jindao
千龍金島
Senryuu Kintou
1933–1935
Flag of Senrian Jindao
Flag of Senria
Emblem of Senria of Senrian Jindao
Emblem of Senria
StatusMilitary occupation by the Republic of Senria
Common languagesSenrian
Xiaodongese
Gaullican
GovernmentMilitary occupation
Prime Minister 
• 1933–1935
Katurou Imahara
Governor-General 
• 1933–1935
Hatirou Nakayama
Historical eraGreat War
10–17 May 1933
• Surrender of Jindao
17 May 1933
23 April 1935
• Handover to Estmere
25 April 1935
Area
19331,125 km2 (434 sq mi)
19351,125 km2 (434 sq mi)
Population
• 1933
566,715
• 1935
435,465
CurrencySenrian yen
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Gaullican Jindao
Estmerish Jindao
Today part of Xiaodong

The Senrian Occupation of Jindao was a military occupation of the city of Jindao, then under the colonial rule of Gaullica but effective military control of Xiaodong, by the Republic of Senria from the Senrian victory in the Battle of Jindao on May 17, 1933 to the signing of the Treaty of Keisi and subsequent handover to Estmere on April 23–25, 1935. Gaullican colonial governor Égide Brassard was the final governor of the city, but was shot by a Senrian sniper after trying to flee the city on December 15. The occupation is known for its brutality, which displayed a series of mass murders and deportations by Senrian troops. The occupation was one of the longest Senria held on the Xiaodongese mainland, lasting almost a year and a half. The occupation saw the population of Jindao decline by almost 20%, a number that would only take until 1937 to recover.

Background

Senrian invasion of Xiaodong

Battle of Jindao

Politics

Prime Minister of Senria Katurou Imahara (left) and Governor-General of Jindao Hatirou Nakayama (right)

Almost immediately after Jindao was seized from Gaullica, Senria declared martial law in the city and gave soldiers in the city almost unlimited powers over the civilian populace. Emphasised by the authoritarian rule of Hatirou Nakayama due to his losses in the Senrian Genocide, Jindao was led fiercely by the Senrian general throughout the occupation. The Senrians utilised the renaming of many major landmarks in Jindao to Senrian-equivalent names, with many street names and districts also being given Senrian names, whilst their Xiaodongese counterparts were outlawed from use. Senrian became a mandatory language to learn for the populace whilst under occupation.

The administrative and military headquarters for the occupational government were set up in the Islands district, making it difficult for guerrilla forces or terrorists to reach the building, the waters being guarded by the Senrian Navy. The military also comprised all political infrastructure within Jindao, including the judiciary, which made the persecution of Xiaodongese prisoners-of-war, some 4,500 of which were captured within Jindao, extremely easy for the Senrian government to achieve. Xiaodongese troops were kept in harsh prisoner-of-war camps and almost always executed within months, mainly in the Chih Te Mo Internment Facility in the south-west of the city. By 1934, the city had lost most of its explicit Xiaodongese characteristics.

Policing in Jindao was conducted by the military, with patrol units often roaming the streets in lieu of an organised police force, which the Senrian government never arranged. Strict curfews were issued throughout the city and those seen outside their residencies outside of curfew hours were regularly shot on sight and their corpses disposed in public places as a warning to other civilians for the consequences of disobedience. St. Chloe's Hospital routinely became full with injured Jindanese civilians in 1933 until Nakayama transformed it into a military hospital and forbade the staff from treating non-Senrians.

Economy

Resistance

War crimes

Post-occupation